Take a 60-second WPM test. Typiq identifies the 3 bigrams slowing you down (the th, er, ing you stumble on) and builds a 10-minute daily drill that fixes them. Most users add 15-20 WPM in 30 days.
Average office worker types 40 WPM. To stay in flow while thinking, you need 60+. Knowledge workers who type over 75 WPM report saving ~45 minutes per day on keyboard-heavy work.
Typiq tracks every bigram and trigram. Slowest 3 become tomorrow's warm-up — no generic "asdf jkl" repeats.
Real source code from JS, Python, Go, Rust. Learn brackets, semicolons, camelCase as muscle memory — not afterthoughts.
Paste an email, Slack thread, or PDF. Typiq turns it into a drill on the vocabulary you actually use at work.
Switch between QWERTY, QWERTZ, AZERTY and 5 more without losing progress. Layout-aware benchmarks.
Stop reaching for the mouse. Drills for VS Code, Figma, Gmail, macOS, Vim — shortcut-by-shortcut, not one giant list.
Offline-first native app for macOS / Windows / Linux. No tabs, no notifications, no streaks bullying you at 11pm.
Most users add 10 WPM in the first two weeks of 10-minute daily sessions. Plateau-breaking gains (past 80 WPM) take 4-6 weeks because the bottleneck shifts from motor to cognitive.
Yes — differently. Past 70 WPM your weakest bigrams matter more than your average. Typiq's adaptive mode isolates them and drills them specifically, which generic word-practice apps can't do.
Yes. Typiq supports 8 languages and multiple layouts (QWERTY, QWERTZ for German, AZERTY for French). Benchmarks are layout-aware.
Yes — paste any text (emails, code, Slack threads, PDFs) and Typiq turns it into a drill. Great for vocabulary you actually use at work.
Typiq is built for individuals. If you want to equip a whole school or classroom, see /for-schools — that's a different product with a teacher dashboard.
Buy the Personal lifetime license. 30-day refund, 30-minute free trial, works offline.